By Dan McLaughlin
Wednesday, May 07, 2025
We’ve seen presidents and vice presidents come into
office before with pie-in-the-sky ideas about how easy it is to bring about
world peace if only the mean old United States would stop being such a
warmonger. At some point, however, reality tends to intrude. In no case has
this been truer than in our Russia policy. Woodrow Wilson, as late as in
January 1918, in his “Fourteen Points,” declared that “the treatment accorded
Russia by her sister nations in the months to come will be the acid test of
their good will, of their comprehension of her needs as distinguished from
their own interests, and of their intelligent and unselfish sympathy.” By July,
Wilson was dispatching American troops to Russia to stop the Bolsheviks and
revive the Eastern Front. Jimmy Carter came to office pledging to slash the military
budget and “signal restraint to Moscow.” After the Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan, Carter kicked off a major defense buildup and slapped Moscow with
a grain embargo and an Olympic boycott. George W. Bush, no dove, treated Russia
as a partner against Islamic radicals and told us that he had looked into
Vladimir Putin’s soul, but he was singing a different tune after Putin invaded
Georgia in 2008. Barack Obama won the Democratic nomination on the back of an
anti–Iraq War speech he had given six years earlier and signaled American
retreat in Afghanistan; he ended up staying in Afghanistan and going back into
Iraq. On the Russia front, Obama and his team gave us Hillary Clinton’s Russian
“reset,” the sneering dismissal of Mitt Romney’s warnings with “the ’80s
called,” and Obama’s pledge to Dmitry Medvedev that he’d have “more flexibility
after the election.” Obama, too, learned the hard way and pivoted to a harder
anti-Kremlin line in his final two years, after the 2014 Russian seizure of
Crimea. Donald Trump, of course, spent the 2016 election sounding like Putin’s
best buddy, but his first term featured a lot of tough sanctions on Russia and
the provision of lethal aid to Ukraine.
Now, it’s JD Vance’s turn to be mugged by reality. Much
like Obama, Vance has built his whole political identity so completely around
opposing the Iraq War, applying it as a model to everything else — especially
to American support for Ukraine’s resistance to a Russian invasion — and personally attacking any Republican who deviates from his
view that it is difficult to introduce much realism into his ideological
framework. But at a Munich Security Conference meeting in Washington, D.C.,
Vance acknowledged that the whole mind-set of treating the Ukrainians as the
opponents of peace was colliding with the reality of the Russian and Ukrainian
negotiating positions. While Vance insisted that “I’m not yet that pessimistic
on this,” that “I wouldn’t say that the Russians are uninterested in bringing
this thing to a resolution,” and that “we think that if cool heads prevail here
we can bring this thing to a durable peace,” he elaborated:
Certainly the first peace offer
that the Russians put on the table, our reaction to it was, you’re asking for
too much, but this is how negotiations unfold. . . . What I would say is right
now the Russians are asking for a certain set of requirements, a certain
set of concessions, in order to end the conflict. We think they’re asking
for too much, ok? And then obviously the Ukrainians matter a lot. They’re
the other . . . party . . . to the direct conflict and we have to ask, . . .
what do [the Ukrainians] need in order to bring this conflict to a successful
completion? . . . The Ukrainians have . . . said they would agree to . . . a
30-day ceasefire. . . . What the Russians have said is a 30-day ceasefire is
not in our strategic interest, so we’ve tried to move beyond the obsession with
the 30-day ceasefire and more on the what would the long-term settlement look
like. [Emphasis added]
Who could have predicted that Putin’s regime would ask
for too much and resist any temporary cessation of hostilities that doesn’t
advance its interests, except for everyone who has followed the behavior of the
Russian regime over the past two decades? This is quite a different tune from
the blame-Zelensky narratives we heard so much of just a few months ago.
Vance added that the administration has come around to
the idea that it can’t cut a deal with Moscow without the Ukrainians — another error the Trump team had made previously, which was aimed
at reaching a deal too onerous for Ukraine for any elected Ukrainian government
to swallow. Now, he admits that direct talks are necessary and that the best
the United States can do is mediate them rather than force a harsh peace on
Kyiv:
The step that we would like to
make right now is we would like both the Russians and the Ukrainians to
actually agree on some basic guidelines for sitting down and talking to one
another. Obviously, the United States is happy to participate in those conversations,
but it’s very important for the Russians and the Ukrainians to start talking to
one another. We think that is the next big step that we would like to take. . .
. The Russians but also the Ukrainians have . . . put a piece of paper in our
hands that says this is what we would need in order to bring this conflict to a
successful resolution. . . . There’s a big gulf, predictably, between where the
Russians and the Ukrainians are, and we think the next step in the negotiation
is to try to close that gulf.
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